Background: High grade gliomas are the most common and most lethal primary cancers of the central nervous system.
Case Report: We herein present a case report of a long-term surviving 36-year-old female diagnosed with high grade glioma, for which she underwent neurosurgery with a gross total removal of the tumor. Shortly thereafter (<3 months) she was readmitted in a desolate state due to a large recurrence.
More than one third of patients with subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) develop clinically significant vasospasm, as a leading morbidity and mortality factor for these patients. It is widely accepted that a) Degradation products of blood are the causative factors of vasospasm b) The amount of subarachnoid blood seen on admission CT is correlated to the risk of vasospasm c) Reducing the subarachnoid clot burden at the time of surgery reduces the risk of vasospasm. But there is no existing method to clear the blood from subarachnoid spaces satisfactorily.
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